IIF alarmed over possible sudden stop in financing globally due to COVID-19

Nehal Samir
4 Min Read

“We worry a global sudden stop in financing is beginning to emerge, with COVID-19 the underlying driver,” the Institute of International Finance (IIF) said.

IIF added that the monetary and fiscal easing measures are a welcome palliative, but at the end only a concerted response in terms of testing and containment will be able to mitigate the fear factor in markets and jump-start global demand.

The world currently suffers from a state of terror due to the outbreak of the COVID-19.

According to the World Health Organization (WHO) 125, 048 cases were confirmed of being infected with the disease to date, while the death toll reached 4,613.

Due to the COVID-19 outbreak, the IIF downgraded its global growth forecast last week, which may potentially approach 1% in 2020, the weakest pace of growth since 2009.

“The epicentre of our down revisions is China, where we expect GDP to fall 1% quarter-on-quarter (QoQ) in 1Q2020, followed by a recovery of 2% QoQ in subsequent quarters, bringing annual average growth down to below 4% from 6% previously,” the IIF explained.

Also, the IIF also cut its US forecast, with the economy flat lining in 2Q as the potential brunt of the COVID-19 shock hits.

It mentioned that the sharp drop in oil prices since then has changed the landscape, raising the risk of credit stress in the US and moving its US forecast closer to recession territory.

“Our high frequency tracking of non-resident portfolio flows to emerging markets (EM) is a useful gauge of risk appetite and points to a large ‘sudden stop’ on that front as well,” the IIF said.

The IIF expressed its fear for 2020 to be another challenging year for growth across EM.

In terms of the non-resident portfolio flows to EM, the IIF said that its tracker is currently the most negative ever, with outflows exceeding the 2013 “taper tantrum” and the 2008 global financial crisis.

“On an aggregated quarterly basis, flows to China have remained positive, obscuring what is quite a negative picture elsewhere,” the IIF mentioned.

“If we take this flow picture as a possible representation for what is happening to risk assets more broadly, a global ‘sudden stop’ is in the making, one that could present substantial downside risk to our forecasts,” the IIF said in a disappointing tone.

It said that what worries especially is that a decade of extraordinary monetary policy stimulus has by design steered lots of flows into high beta assets, including emerging markets.

The IIF pointed out to that Turkey and Argentina showed in 2018 just how negative “sudden stops” can be for economic activity, with the reversal in foreign financing leading to a shut down in investment from which both countries have yet to recover.

“We worry that the unfolding ‘sudden stop’ now has a similar potential, just on a more global and systemic level. We have documented negative growth momentum in many emerging markets even before the COVID-19 shock, including in Mexico and South Africa, so that the initial conditions in many places are weak and vulnerability to a persistent pull-back in foreign financing material,” the IIF concluded.

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